They are not intended to be a finished product, you are supposed to add your own display and keyboard. If you want really portable start with the Pi zero which doesn't have the big ports, then slap on a small display and keyboard of your choice. There are small kits like these https://ameridroid.com/collections/all-products/products/odroid-go-advance for example. There are also a few different ones with blackberry keyboards https://liliputing.com/beepberry-is-a-79-hackable-pocket-computer-kit-with-a-blackberry-keyboard/ https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/05/its-a-raspberry-pi-a-blackberry-keyboard-and-a-battery-its-the-beepberry/ (when blackberry quit making hardware they surplussed a bunch of keyboards)
yep, use a free ddns service if you don't want to pay
All my pictures are of outside activities, figured maybe someday someone local may see then interact outside as well.
I've been posting on pixelfed.social but haven't had much interaction, but maybe this will get the word out a bit.
Your rockhopper is 89 feet long? :)
Installed an early version of Slackware on a 386 in the 90's. Went through a couple it jobs so I ran windows for a bit until 2002. I had bought a nice laptop and it came with windows xp. Xp was so bad after windows 2000 that I had to find something else. Played with redhat and a couple other dostros then went back to Slackware and have been on it ever since.
I use it a lot. I'm finding things like hiking trails are more up to date than Google maps
I'm not much of a gamer but I'm tempted to run a couple games just to get included in the %. I wonder where they get the data from.
Slackware Linux
Documentation is also at https://docs.slackware.com/ written by its users. And I find that it is a working system with minimal effort, there is very little that needs done after the quick install.